To Guard Ourselves Against Sin, It is Good to Reflect Often That the Devil Wages Constant Warfare Against Us, and That Those Who Overcome Him Do Not Remain Without Reward
May 21
(From a Homily of Saint John Chrysostom on the Upbringing and Discipline of Children)
By Archpriest Victor Guryev
May 21
(From a Homily of Saint John Chrysostom on the Upbringing and Discipline of Children)
By Archpriest Victor Guryev
Some foolish parents completely neglect the upbringing of their children in their early years. When a child does something wrong, the foolish parent says: “Oh, it is nothing; he is still a child and does not understand. When he grows up, he will stop doing such things.” And so the child grows up like a wild apple tree in the forest — uncultivated, overgrown, and barren. But if you taste the fruit of that tree, you will not rejoice, for it is sour and bitter. Thus, without restraint, correction, or instruction, the child eventually grows into a slave of his disordered inclinations; his early bad behavior becomes habit, and he becomes an unworthy member of society, a grief to his parents, and a burden and scandal to many.
“Nothing is worse,” says Saint Chrysostom, “than when the faults of children are not corrected, and thus become habits in them. These faults, when neglected, usually corrupt the child to such an extent that later there is no possibility of correcting him by any exhortation. The devil then leads such children about like captives wherever he wishes. He becomes their absolute ruler, gives them destructive counsels, and the unfortunate children, not even realizing that these counsels lead them to eternal ruin, carry them out with full willingness.”






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